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Dive into the research topics where Bogdan Wojtyniak is active.

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Featured researches published by Bogdan Wojtyniak.


International Journal of Epidemiology | 2009

Educational inequalities in mortality in four Eastern European countries: divergence in trends during the post-communist transition from 1990 to 2000

Mall Leinsalu; Irina Stirbu; Denny Vågerö; Ramune Kalediene; Katalin Kovács; Bogdan Wojtyniak; Wiktoria Wróblewska; Johan P. Mackenbach; Anton E. Kunst

BACKGROUND Post-communist transition has had a huge impact on mortality in Eastern Europe. We examined how educational inequalities in mortality changed between 1990 and 2000 in Estonia, Lithuania, Poland and Hungary. METHODS Cross-sectional data for the years around 1990 and 2000 were used. Age-standardized mortality rates and mortality rate ratios (for total mortality only) were calculated for men and women aged 35-64 in three educational categories, for five broad cause-of-death groups and for five (seven among women) specific causes of death. RESULTS Educational inequalities in mortality increased in all four countries but in two completely different ways. In Poland and Hungary, mortality rates decreased or remained the same in all educational groups. In Estonia and Lithuania, mortality rates decreased among the highly educated, but increased among those of low education. In Estonia and Lithuania, for men and women combined, external causes and circulatory diseases contributed most to the increasing educational gap in total mortality. CONCLUSIONS Different trends were observed between the two former Soviet republics and the two Central Eastern European countries. This divergence can be related to differences in socioeconomic development during the 1990s and in particular, to the spread of poverty, deprivation and marginalization. Alcohol and psychosocial stress may also have been important mediating factors.


The Lancet | 1985

Impact of environmental sanitation and crowding on infant mortality in rural Bangladesh

Mizanur Rahman; Bogdan Wojtyniak; M. Mujibur Rahaman; K.M.S. Aziz

In two villages of Bangladesh, 2471 infants born in 1976 and 1977 were followed up for a year to study the impact of environmental sanitation and crowding on their mortality. Neonatal and postneonatal mortality rates in the study cohort were 100 and 75 per 1000 live-births, respectively. Multiple logistic regression analysis was done to estimate the effects of the selected risk factors while controlling for some socioeconomic, demographic, and biological characteristics. Risk of postneonatal mortality (PNNM) in the households which did not use latrines was 3 X 12 times (p less than 0.01) higher than in those which did and 1.5 times (p less than 0.05) higher in the households with 10 or more persons than in smaller households. PNNM in the households which did not use tube-wells (hand-pump) water was higher, but not significantly so, than in those which used tube-well water for all purposes. Neonatal mortality was completely unrelated to the environmental factors investigated.


Social Science & Medicine | 1987

Measles case fatality among the under-fives: A multivariate analysis of risk factors in a rural area of Bangladesh

Abbas Bhuiya; Bogdan Wojtyniak; Stan D'Souza; Lutfun Nahar; Kashem Shaikh

This study investigated the relationship of measles case fatality among the under-fives with age, case type, complications, sex, mothers education, and household economic condition in a rural area of Bangladesh. A total of 3465 measles cases were detected during 1980 and 61 of them died of measles associated complications within 45 days of rash onset. Case type, sex, mothers education and household economic condition were found to have statistically significant impact on case fatality. Risk of death among the secondary cases was 1.87 times higher than in the primary cases, girls had 2.73 times higher risk of death than boys. Children of mothers without any formal schooling and those from the poorest households experienced 1.83 and 2.18 times higher risk of death than their counterparts whose mothers had at least one year of schooling and from economically better off households respectively.


BMC Public Health | 2012

Socioeconomic inequalities in mortality from conditions amenable to medical interventions: do they reflect inequalities in access or quality of health care?

Iris Plug; Rasmus Hoffmann; Barbara Artnik; Matthias Bopp; Carme Borrell; Giuseppe Costa; Patrick Deboosere; Santi Esnaola; Ramune Kalediene; Mall Leinsalu; Olle Lundberg; Pekka Martikainen; Enrique Regidor; Jitka Rychtarikova; Bjørn Heine Strand; Bogdan Wojtyniak; Johan P. Mackenbach

BackgroundPrevious studies have reported large socioeconomic inequalities in mortality from conditions amenable to medical intervention, but it is unclear whether these can be attributed to inequalities in access or quality of health care, or to confounding influences such as inequalities in background risk of diseases. We therefore studied whether inequalities in mortality from conditions amenable to medical intervention vary between countries in patterns which differ from those observed for other (non-amenable) causes of death. More specifically, we hypothesized that, as compared to non-amenable causes, inequalities in mortality from amenable causes are more strongly associated with inequalities in health care use and less strongly with inequalities in common risk factors for disease such as smoking.MethodsCause-specific mortality data for people aged 30–74 years were obtained for 14 countries, and were analysed by calculating age-standardized mortality rates and relative risks comparing a lower with a higher educational group. Survey data on health care use and behavioural risk factors for people aged 30–74 years were obtained for 12 countries, and were analysed by calculating age-and sex-adjusted odds ratios comparing a low with a higher educational group. Patterns of association were explored by calculating correlation coefficients.ResultsIn most countries and for most amenable causes of death substantial inequalities in mortality were observed, but inequalities in mortality from amenable causes did not vary between countries in patterns that are different from those seen for inequalities in non-amenable mortality. As compared to non-amenable causes, inequalities in mortality from amenable causes are not more strongly associated with inequalities in health care use. Inequalities in mortality from amenable causes are also not less strongly associated with common risk factors such as smoking.ConclusionsWe did not find evidence that inequalities in mortality from amenable conditions are related to inequalities in access or quality of health care. Further research is needed to find the causes of socio-economic inequalities in mortality from amenable conditions, and caution should be exercised in interpreting these inequalities as indicating health care deficiencies.


Population Health Metrics | 2012

The contribution of educational inequalities to lifespan variation

Alyson A. van Raalte; Anton E. Kunst; Olle Lundberg; Mall Leinsalu; Pekka Martikainen; Barbara Artnik; Patrick Deboosere; Irina Stirbu; Bogdan Wojtyniak; Johan P. Mackenbach

BackgroundStudies of socioeconomic inequalities in mortality consistently point to higher death rates in lower socioeconomic groups. Yet how these between-group differences relate to the total variation in mortality risk between individuals is unknown.MethodsWe used data assembled and harmonized as part of the Eurothine project, which includes census-based mortality data from 11 European countries. We matched this to national data from the Human Mortality Database and constructed life tables by gender and educational level. We measured variation in age at death using Theils entropy index, and decomposed this measure into its between- and within-group components.ResultsThe least-educated groups lived between three and 15 years fewer than the highest-educated groups, the latter having a more similar age at death in all countries. Differences between educational groups contributed between 0.6% and 2.7% to total variation in age at death between individuals in Western European countries and between 1.2% and 10.9% in Central and Eastern European countries. Variation in age at death is larger and differs more between countries among the least-educated groups.ConclusionsAt the individual level, many known and unknown factors are causing enormous variation in age at death, socioeconomic position being only one of them. Reducing variations in age at death among less-educated people by providing protection to the vulnerable may help to reduce inequalities in mortality between socioeconomic groups.


Tobacco Control | 2017

Contribution of smoking to socioeconomic inequalities in mortality: a study of 14 European countries, 1990–2004

G Gregoraci; F.J. van Lenthe; Barbara Artnik; Matthias Bopp; P Deboosere; Katalin Kovács; Cwn Looman; Pekka Martikainen; Gwenn Menvielle; F Peters; Bogdan Wojtyniak; R de Gelder; J. P. Mackenbach

Background Smoking contributes to socioeconomic inequalities in mortality, but the extent to which this contribution has changed over time and driven widening or narrowing inequalities in total mortality remains unknown. We studied socioeconomic inequalities in smoking-attributable mortality and their contribution to inequalities in total mortality in 1990–1994 and 2000–2004 in 14 European countries. Methods We collected, harmonised and standardised population-wide data on all-cause and lung-cancer mortality by age, gender, educational and occupational level in 14 European populations in 1990–1994 and 2000–2004. Smoking-attributable mortality was indirectly estimated using the Preston-Glei-Wilmoth method. Results In 2000–2004, smoking-attributable mortality was higher in lower socioeconomic groups in all countries among men, and in all countries except Spain, Italy and Slovenia, among women, and the contribution of smoking to socioeconomic inequalities in mortality varied between 19% and 55% among men, and between −1% and 56% among women. Since 1990–1994, absolute inequalities in smoking-attributable mortality and the contribution of smoking to inequalities in total mortality have decreased in most countries among men, but increased among women. Conclusions In many European countries, smoking has become less important as a determinant of socioeconomic inequalities in mortality among men, but not among women. Inequalities in smoking remain one of the most important entry points for reducing inequalities in mortality.


Journal of Biosocial Science | 1989

Malnutrition and child mortality: are socioeconomic factors important?

Abbas Bhuiya; Bogdan Wojtyniak; Rezaul Karim

The influences of household economic condition, maternal education, sex, and nutritional status of children on mortality were examined using multivariate analytical techniques. Weights of around 1700 children aged 2 60 months in five villages of Matlab, Bangladesh, were taken during the first half of 1981. The children were followed for 18 months and their survival was recorded. The severely malnourished children had a risk of death nine times that of their counterparts with better nutritional status. Female children had a higher risk of death than the males. Mothers education and economic condition of household also showed negative relationships with the risk of death, but the effect of mothers education was modified by economic condition and sex of the children.


Social Science & Medicine | 2014

Assessing the potential impact of increased participation in higher education on mortality: Evidence from 21 European populations

Ivana Kulhánová; Rasmus Hoffmann; Ken Judge; Caspar W. N. Looman; Terje A. Eikemo; Matthias Bopp; Patrick Deboosere; Mall Leinsalu; Pekka Martikainen; Jitka Rychtaříková; Bogdan Wojtyniak; Gwenn Menvielle; Johan P. Mackenbach

Although higher education has been associated with lower mortality rates in many studies, the effect of potential improvements in educational distribution on future mortality levels is unknown. We therefore estimated the impact of projected increases in higher education on mortality in European populations. We used mortality and population data according to educational level from 21 European populations and developed counterfactual scenarios. The first scenario represented the improvement in the future distribution of educational attainment as expected on the basis of an assumption of cohort replacement. We estimated the effect of this counterfactual scenario on mortality with a 10-15-year time horizon among men and women aged 30-79 years using a specially developed tool based on population attributable fractions (PAF). We compared this with a second, upward levelling scenario in which everyone has obtained tertiary education. The reduction of mortality in the cohort replacement scenario ranged from 1.9 to 10.1% for men and from 1.7 to 9.0% for women. The reduction of mortality in the upward levelling scenario ranged from 22.0 to 57.0% for men and from 9.6 to 50.0% for women. The cohort replacement scenario was estimated to achieve only part (4-25% (men) and 10-31% (women)) of the potential mortality decrease seen in the upward levelling scenario. We concluded that the effect of on-going improvements in educational attainment on average mortality in the population differs across Europe, and can be substantial. Further investments in education may have important positive side-effects on population health.


Journal of Biosocial Science | 1991

The relationship between sociodemographic variables and pregnancy loss in a rural area of Bangladesh

G. Mostafa; Bogdan Wojtyniak; V. Fauveau; A. Bhuiyan

This study examines the relationship between eight sociodemographic variables and the risk of pregnancy loss in a rural area of Bangladesh. The risks of spontaneous miscarriage and stillbirth were significantly associated with maternal age, pregnancy order and previous pregnancy wastage.


Health Affairs | 2017

Trends In Inequalities In Mortality Amenable To Health Care In 17 European Countries

Johan P. Mackenbach; Yannan Hu; Barbara Artnik; Matthias Bopp; Giuseppe Costa; Ramune Kalediene; Pekka Martikainen; Gwenn Menvielle; Bjørn Heine Strand; Bogdan Wojtyniak; Wilma Nusselder

Little is known about the effectiveness of health care in reducing inequalities in health. We assessed trends in inequalities in mortality from conditions amenable to health care in seventeen European countries in the period 1980-2010 and used models that included country fixed effects to study the determinants of these trends. Our findings show remarkable declines over the study period in amenable mortality among people with a low level of education. We also found stable absolute inequalities in amenable mortality over time between people with low and high levels of education, but widening relative inequalities. Higher health care expenditure was associated with lower mortality from amenable causes, but not from nonamenable causes. The effect of health care expenditure on amenable mortality was equally strong, in relative terms, among people with low levels of education and those with high levels. As a result, higher health care expenditure was associated with a narrowing of absolute inequalities in amenable mortality. Our findings suggest that in the European context, more generous health care funding provides some protection against inequalities in amenable mortality.

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Mall Leinsalu

National Institutes of Health

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Johan P. Mackenbach

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Patrick Deboosere

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Ramune Kalediene

Lithuanian University of Health Sciences

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Enrique Regidor

Complutense University of Madrid

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Bjørn Heine Strand

Norwegian Institute of Public Health

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